It's easy to feel overwhelmed by the massive production of architecture today. Scroll through ArchDaily for more than a minute and even we'd forgive you for losing track of it all. But what seems like an endless scroll of architectural production doesn't quite fit with the popular movements surrounding resource sharing and community.

Hidden among the mass production that has defined architecture in the last century is a germ - one that seems to be marching to the forefront of practice today. More and more designers seem to be taking on locally-focused and/or adaptive reuse works. Award shortlists today highlight not icons by recognizable names, but sensitive international works that are notable for their process as much as their product.

The common image of the architect may be of one obsessed with ego and newness, but practice today doesn't bear that out as much as it used to. This week's news touched on issues of reduction, reuse, and a radical rethink what architecture is in the 21st century.

The isolated nature of the site was one of the project’s great challenges, requiring the architects to develop inventive design and construction solutions on the fly. It was this openness to experimentation that, according to the project’s client, made the relatively unknown office a perfect fit for the commission. “We chose the architects precisely because they are not the kind who think they know everything,” said Denise Aguiar, director of the Bradesco Foundation, to Olly Wainwright of The Guardian. “...The designers seemed like they would actually listen to what the students wanted rather than imposing their own ideas.”

Reduce, Reuse, Recycle

The Met in New York announced a major overhaul of their famed Rockefeller Wing, to be led by wHY Architecture and Kulapat Yantrasast. The new design for the hall, currently home to the museum’s collections from Africa, Oceania and Americas, will draw inspiration from the collection’s local design traditions. Work is currently expected to start in 2020 and reach completion in 2023.

An extensive renovation of Moshe Safdie’s apartment in his seminal Habitat 67 project reached completion this week after nearly two years of work. The project, initially timed to coincide with the 50 year anniversary of Habitat 67, fully fit-out the apartment to meet contemporary energy efficiency and comfort standards. The new space is clear a light-filled - a perfect retreat from the Montreal winter.

The year’s best US refurbishment projects were announced by the Richard Driehaus foundation this week. The works may appear restrained, but an unshowy appearance belies the complexity of adaptive reuse projects - particularly when famed historic architects are involved.

The concept is a broad one, and one that architects may find disconcerting. In a profession so inherently tied to production and development, how can architects take on the idea of degrowth? Harper and Smith see particular potential in the idealism that is architecture’s DNA.

“In terms of what architecture can do,” explains Smith, “we talked about why architects are probably sympathetic candidates… because we live in this weird dichotomy, but we do still shape so much of what the world is like that we are still the custodians of typology. So if we’re going to think about what this world actually looks like, architects are really very well equipped. When politicians do start talking about this, they’re going to want to cite examples. That's where we come in.”